(This is an opinion-based article written by MMAWeekly.com U.K. correspondent Lee Whitehead. He may be a bit mental, so feel free to tell him so.)

I’m going to start off with a controversial subject: Georges St-Pierre.

For many MMA fans, he symbolizes the perfect MMA fighter – comfortable striking, wrestling, and with submissions, all wrapped up in a fantastically conditioned package, living at the top tier in the UFC’s welterweight division.

So what is controversial you may ask?

Georges St-Pierre after defeating Jake Shields at UFC 129

His lack of recent decisive finishes. St-Pierre has become the UFC’s decision machine, and although he is arguably one of the best pound-for-pound fighters in MMA, regardless of promotion, his recent fights haven’t exactly excited the fans.

We all love a winner. There is something appealing about a champion besting all comers in competition. At UFC 129, the Canadian did exactly that and defended his belt against former Strikeforce king Jake Shields, but it was a five-round drawn out affair without any notable action or urgency.

Such is the level of talent that GSP possesses that he is able to fight and win without stepping out of his comfort zone. But that hasn’t always been the case. GSP’s early-to-middle career was littered with stoppages, but ever since regaining the title from Matt Serra, he hasn’t really threatened to decimate an opponent.

I think some of this comes down to the pay structure in the UFC. Typically a fighter will receive a “show” amount and then a “win” amount, although sometimes highly visible players are on fixed salaries for a fight, along with a nice slice of the pay-per-view if they are a particularly powerful draw. In addition to that are sponsorship deals, bonuses for performance, and many other payments that aren’t disclosed to the public.

For GSP, a safe win preserved his record in front of a home crowd, reduced the risk of making a mistake, and he got to walk away with a tidy sum to invest. As a person, fair play to him, but from a fight-hungry fan point of view, the encounter in Toronto failed to deliver.

If the UFC altered its approach to winning salaries and placed a graded win-bonus system on stoppages by round, I bet you would see a lot more finishes in bouts.

At the moment there are only disclosed bonuses for Fight of the Night, Submission of the Night and Knockout of the Night. It serves as an incentive for some fighters, but it’s no wonder that most of the time the fighters that win these bonuses are those that are still hungry and proving themselves.

Current Pay Scale Model

Typically there is only one KO or Sub bonus on a card, although there can be several finishes on a card, usually a decision will be made as to who picks up the bonus.

Finish Inducing Pay Scale Model

$60,000 predetermined finishing amount split into a sliding scale over three rounds

1st @ 100% / 2nd @ 66% / 3rd @ 33% / Decision = 0%

Fighter A: $6,000 Show + $60,000 1st Round Finish = $66,000

Fighter B: $6,000 Show + $20,000 3rd Round Finish = $26,000

Now I know that the above model isn’t fully refined, but it shows that if you want a nice paycheck you need to finish the fight, even up to the last minute of the third round. If you end up in a decision, then base pay and back to the drawing board. I know that may seem harsh, but you would definitely see a lot more finishes on fight cards.

Obviously, salaries increase in line with stature and experience. Maybe in a championship bout, you would have a percentage scale of your base salary across five rounds. At the moment, a lot of top-flight fighters’ salaries appear to be capped or fixed. If you can guarantee to the top fighter a bump in base salary for the next fight that is in-line with the bonus then you further incentivize them to finish.

Due to the championship nature of the fight, you could apply the same five-round sliding scale and bump to the challenger as well.

Current Pay Scale Model

$100,000 Champion Base + $100,000 Win = $200,000 + % of PPV

Next fight will probably be the same if you are on a fixed deal until such a time as your contract comes up for negotiation.

I know that a lot of people will be looking at this structure and thinking that the UFC will have some expensive fight cards on its hands with this approach, but what that would mean is a better spread of top-flight fighters across cards from a cost/talent point of view, and more exciting fights because the participants will be trying to finish for a bigger paycheck, instead of landing that takedown in the last 30 seconds in order to sway the judges.

Imaging if you picked up a UFC PPV and there was only one decision on the entire card, the rest of it was littered with stoppages. I bet you’d be pretty pleased and would tell all anyone who would listen that these guys delivered the goods.

If you were there in the flesh at the venue, you wouldn’t be leaving thinking that the whole card delivered except for a boring main event; you’d be raving about how good it was that these guys left it all in the Octagon and no stone was left unturned in their quest for victory.

Food for thought maybe? Do you think it has traction? Feel free to comment below…

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